Tech Giant Google Threatens To Block Search Engine Services In Australia

Tech Giant Google Threatens To Block Search Engine Services In Australia

By Spy Uganda CorrespondentĀ 

USA: Technology giant Google has threatened to stop making its search engine available in Australia if the federal governmentā€™s proposed mandatory media bargaining code becomes law in its current form.

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Australia is introducing a landmark law to make Google,Ā FacebookĀ and potentially other tech companies pay media outlets for their news content.

The Managing director Mel Silva on Friday revealed that the landmark code ā€œremains unworkableā€, despite government attempts to place the web giant in a December revision.

Google had previously warned that the code could lead to aĀ ā€œdramatically worseā€ online experience and the possible end to free services, but until now had not flagged stopping Google Search engines entirely.

Facebook, which would also be required to pay news organisations using a binding ā€œfinal offerā€ arbitration process if no agreement can be reached, has similarlyĀ threatened to stop Australians sharing news on its platform.

Appearing before the standing committee on economics, Silva said the companyā€™s concerns centred around three areas, the most salient of which is ā€œthe requirement to pay for links and snippets in searchā€.

ā€œThis provision in the code would set an untenable precedent for our business and the digital economy,ā€ she said.

ā€œItā€™s not compatible with how search engines work, or how the internet works, and this is not just Googleā€™s view, it has been cited in many of the submissions received by the inquiry.ā€

Echoing the concerns of Tim Berners-Lee, who founded the worldwide web in 1989, Silva said the ā€œprinciple of unrestricted linking between websites is fundamental to searchā€.

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She also pointed to the ā€œunmanageable financial and operational riskā€ that the laws would impose of the company, which until now has had to meet very few regulations.

ā€œIf this version of the code were to become law, it would give us no real choice but to stop making Google available in Australia,ā€ Silva said, adding that this would be a worst-case scenario.

Any removal of Google Search, which is used for 95 per cent of searches in Australia, would be a blow to the company, as it contributes to a significant chunk of its $4 billion yearly advertising revenue.

But Silva further noted that Google is committed to achieving a workable code, proposing technical amendments that would allow it to pay publishers for value, without breaking Google Search.

One such amendment would see the code designate News Showcase and allow Google to reach commercial agreements to pay publishers for value instead of payments for links and snippets.

News Showcase which is not yet available in Australia – is a recently introduced Google product that is part of its plans to pay US$1 billion to publishers across the world over the next three years.

Independent Senator Rex Patrick challenged Silvaā€™s assessment, which he said was a ā€œcommercial precedent, not a technical precedentā€ and described as both ā€œdistractingā€ and ā€œmisleadingā€.

Silva also used her opening statement to address the ā€œmisconceptionā€ that users ā€œonly come to Google because they can find newsā€, with news queries representing only 1.25 per cent of queries.

ā€œEach year we help more than 19 million Australians find information online,ā€ she said.

ā€œThe fact that we offer a useful search engine provides a platform for 1.3 million business, large and small, in Australia, to be discovered by users both here and around the world.ā€

ā€œThe free service we offer to Australian users, and our business model has been built on the ability to link freely between websites. This is a key building block of the internet.ā€

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